Whilden & Co. v. Pearce

2 S.E. 709, 27 S.C. 44, 1887 S.C. LEXIS 97
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJune 28, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2 S.E. 709 (Whilden & Co. v. Pearce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whilden & Co. v. Pearce, 2 S.E. 709, 27 S.C. 44, 1887 S.C. LEXIS 97 (S.C. 1887).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice McGowaN.

In October, 1883, the defendant, Pearce, executed and delivered to the plaintiffs a mortgage of two tracts of land, a turpentine still and fixtures, and of certain horses and mules therein named, for and in consideration of advances to be made to him for the year 1884, to an amount not exceeding $3,000, to be paid on or before November 1, 1884, with interest at the rate of ten per cent, per annum from the date of said advances, to enable the said Pearce to carry on the business of farming and manufacturing naval stores in Sumter County. The mortgage also contained the following provision ; “And I do further give to said W. W. Whilden &• Co. a lien on all crude turpentine, rosin, and spirits of turpentine to be [45]*45made, manufactured, or controlled bj me during the year 1884 ; and I do further covenant and agree to ship to said W. W. Whilden & Co. all naval stores to be manufactured or controlled by me during said year, the same to be sold by them on commission, according to the custom of merchants of Charleston, S. C. ; the net proceeds of said sales to be applied so far as the same may be necessary, to the payment of advances made to me by said W. W. Whilden & Co.,” &e.

The plaintiffs advanced money and supplies so liberally, that on March 1, 1881, the defendant was indebted to them in the sum of $2,910, which, with interest, was about the amount specifically secured by the mortgage. The defendant, without any other instructions as to the application of the proceeds, forwarded some naval stores, which were sold by the plaintiffs, and they continued to make further advances, the monthly advances exceeding the receipts from the stores sent, until the latter part of October, when they refused to make further advances, and, applying the receipts from the stores to the unsecured advances in excess of the $3,000 covered by the mortgage, claimed that the defendant was indebted to them in the sum of $3,522.10, of which $3,275 was of the mortgage debt proper and interest, and the remainder, $247.10, was still a balance of the unsecured advances.

Thereupon the defendant notified the plaintiffs to come up and take charge of “the stock, still,” &c., and, in accordance with this request, they sent one Chapman as their agent, to whom the defendant gave an instrument of writing as follows: “I, J. E. Pearce, do hereby deliver over to Messrs. W. W. Whilden & Co., all goods and chattels, personal property, and choses in action, included in my mortgage to them, &e., and hereby authorize and empower the said W. W. Whilden & Co., &c., to sell and dispose of all or any part of said personal property at public or private sale, and without advertisement.” But Chapman, finding that all the property around the still and barrel timber in the woods had been attached as the property of the defendant, at the instance of one C. W. Humphreys, got actual possession only of the property included in the mortgage, viz., still, stock, and two wagons and harness. This property he sold at public auction by [46]*46an auctioneer, and credited the net proceeds of sale on the general account of the plaintiffs, who then instituted these proceedings to foreclose the mortgage on the two tracts of land, for the payment of the balance of the $8,000.

The defendant insisted that the whole of the proceeds of sale of the naval stores should be applied upon the note for $3,000 secured by the mortgage; and that under the paper purporting to deliver to the plaintiffs all the personal property included in the mortgage, they should be held responsible for certain barrels of rosin and “scrape” crude turpentine, lot of barrel timber in the woods, and also “the turpentine in one hundred thousand boxes,” &c., and, these items of property being accounted for, he alleged “by way of defence that he had paid said mortgage debt in full,” &c.

The issues were referred to the master, J. D. Dunlap, Esq., who took the testimony and stated the accounts. He held, that the naval stores having been forwarded without special instructions, the plaintiffs had the right to apply the proceeds of sale to the unsecured advances made in excess of the mortgage debt; but that the proceeds of the personal property, still, stock, &c , regularly covered by the mortgage and received and sold by the agent of the plaintiffs for $340.73, should be credited on the mortgage debt proper for $3,000, reducing the amount of the same to $2,646.54 on August 14, 1885, for which the mortgage should be foreclosed on the lands. He held also that the plaintiffs, never having had actual possession of the crude turpentine on the yard, “stuff in the woods,” &c., were not responsible for the value thereof. Upon exceptions to this report, the cause was heard by Judge Fraser, who concurred with the master in all respects, except in reference to the application of the proceeds of the sale of the naval stores sold by the plaintiffs, as to which he directed that they also should be credited on the note for $3,000 specifically secured by the mortgage, leaving the advances in excess of that sum unsecured. From this decree both parties appeal to this court.

ExceptioN oe Plaintiees. — “That his honor erred in adjudging that the proceeds of all shipments made by the defendant to plaintiffs should be credited to the account of $3,000 and interest,[47]*47instead of holding and deciding that the plaintiffs had the right to apply the payments as they have done.”

Defendant's Exceptions. — “I. Because his honor erred in that he held that the plaintiffs did not take into their possession and were responsible for all of the property that was covered by his lien and mortgage, which was in existence on November 1, 1884, at which time the defendant turned over all of said property to W. H. Chapman, as the agent of the plaintiffs. II. Because his honor erred in that he held that the plaintiffs were not responsible for the value of the ‘crude turpentine and the stuff' in the woods;’ and that such value should not be entered as a credit against any balance that may be due the plaintiffs by the defendant,” &c.

As to the exceptions of the defendant, we agree with the Circuit Judge, that “they ai’e not sufficiently definite as to the property referred to by them. On an examination of the report and the testimony in the case, I do not see sufficient evidence that there was any property covered by the mortgage and the written agreement to take possession and sell without advertisement, which the plaintiffs either did not sell and properly account for, or which they made themselves liable for by neglecting to take possession of and sell and account for. There is no evidence that plaintiffs ever agreed to carry on the operations of the turpentine farm,” &c. Besides, in regard to the articles of property which were not in existence at the time the mortgage was executed, but as to which the defendant simply declared a lien, .and covenanted to ship to the plaintiffs during the year, we will speak hereafter.

The most important question in the case is, whether the plaintiffs were bound by law to apply the proceeds of all the naval stores sold by them during the year to the mortgage debt proper for $3,000, and thus cancelling the same, .to leave the advances made in excess of that amount entirely unsecured.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 S.E. 709, 27 S.C. 44, 1887 S.C. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whilden-co-v-pearce-sc-1887.